Episode 41: The Moral Poverty of Capitalist Healthcare Framing - podcast episode cover

Episode 41: The Moral Poverty of Capitalist Healthcare Framing

Jun 20, 201858 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:
Metacast
Spotify
Youtube
RSS

Episode description

Healthcare marketplaces,” “private insurers competing for your business” “insurance subsidies,” For years, Democrats bet big on framing the healthcare debate using technocratic, capitalist terms––they weren’t going to radically change the system of healthcare, simply accent the existing private insurance-based model making things “smarter,” “easier,” more “tech-driven.”

As the Affordable Care Act faces continued right-wing attacks and liberal-leaning activists increasingly look to single-payer, efforts to radically shift the healthcare system require--before they can really go anywhere--a radical shift in how we talk about healthcare. 

On this episode, we ask: How can activists rewire the public’s brains when it comes to the topic of healthcare? How can the rhetorical tics of the past be retired, and how can the conversation about healthcare shift from a technical problem to a moral imperative? 

We are joined by researcher and writer Natalie Shure.

For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android
Open in Metacast
Episode 41: The Moral Poverty of Capitalist Healthcare Framing | Citations Needed podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast